How to communicate science

From the UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON

What makes influential science? Telling a good story

sciencetellingstory

It turns out that even in the world of scientific writing, your eighth-grade teacher was right: how you write can matter as much as what you write.

In a study published Dec. 15 in the journal PLOS ONE, researchers from the University of Washington looked at the abstracts from more than 700 scientific papers about climate change to find out what makes a paper influential in its field. But instead of focusing on content, they looked at writing style, which is normally more the province of humanities professors rather than scientists.

Their idea was that papers written in a more narrative style — those that tell a story — might be more influential than those with a drier, more expository style. Psychology and literary theory have long held that if you want someone to remember something, you should communicate it in the form of a story. The UW researchers — led by Annie Hillier, a recent graduate from the UW’s School of Marine and Environmental Affairs, and professors Ryan Kelly and Terrie Klinger — wondered whether this theory would hold up in the realm of peer-reviewed scientific literature.

Remarkably, it did. The most highly cited papers tended to include elements like sensory language, a greater degree of language indicating cause-and-effect and a direct appeal to the reader for a particular follow-up action.

“The results were especially surprising given that we often think of scientific influence as being driven by science itself, rather than the form in which it is presented,” Hillier said.

Perhaps even more surprising, the researchers noted, was the finding that the highest-rated journals tended to feature articles that had more narrative content.

“We don’t know if the really top journals pick the most readable articles, and that’s why those articles are more influential, or if the more narrative papers would be influential no matter what journal they are in,” Kelly said.

The researchers used a crowdsourcing website to evaluate the narrative content of the journal articles. Online contributors were asked a series of questions about each abstract to measure whether papers had a narrative style, including elements like language that appeals to one’s senses and emotions.

The researchers hope this work might lead to advances in scientific communication, improving the odds that science might lead the way to better decisions in the policy realm.

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December 18, 2016 4:22 pm

Hello, in a few weeks time I turn 90 years of age, I still have a excellent memory and can recall a science teacher in 1937 who repeated a famous experiement by a Danish school teacher, where he placed a wire across a magnetic compass, and passed a currant through it. The needle moved, thus proving that a flow of electricity produces a magnetic field.
Michael Fariday took it one step further and thus invented the induction coil and thus the electric generater and motor.
And from that we owe all of the modern electronics of today.
Make things intresting, and this applies to any subject, and the kids will learn from such lessons and go onto better things.
But today’s teachers seem to have lost this ability, or are so locked into their pet “Cause” that they can no longer stir any intrest in their pupils.
I recall a female maths teacher in 1942 who became angry with me when I asked what the letters on the blackboard meant.
It was not until I got into radio servicing and had to use Ohms law that I realised that Algebra was simply a way of telling you how to do the sum, so why could not that teacher have told me that.
Teachers who cannot convey their knowledge to the pupil should be removed from the classroom. And of course this happens, they end up in Administration telling good teachers how and what to teach.
95 % of what I I know now was learned after I left school.
Regards Michael Elliott. VK5ELL.

Lars P.
Reply to  Michael Elliott
December 22, 2016 10:06 am

90? Congratulations!!
I guess, schools have changed a lot since then, and yet the children not so much.
To the subject, I think telling a narrative might indeed help to promote a subject, even if it is a science one.

Johann Wundersamer
December 20, 2016 4:13 pm

– When telling about Cú Chulainn the story is frozen in a narrative.
– Cú Chulainn lives in
https://www.google.at/search?q=c%C3%BA+chulainn+story&oq=c%C3%BA+chulainn+story&aqs=chrome
– that’s a story in readable style.
So what.